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Baseball, luck, and run differential
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The reason they play 162 games in a baseball season is because luck plays a huge roll in who wins. Over a long season the best teams have the best records, but when you are dealing with a sport where the best hitters fail 70% of the time luck plays a big roll in who gets the important hit at the important time.

Studies show that teams that make the playoffs in a year when they win a high percentage of one/two run games are probably not as good as their record, and teams that have poor records because they lose a bunch of one/two run games are better than their record.

Just last week (May 15) I saw where the Reds had the worst record in the league in one run games (6-13) and were just as bad in 2 run games (3-6). Over the course of the season our luck will change.

Run scoring differential is a good way to judge how good a team is. Currently the Reds are at +25. The only three teams with a better run differential in the National league are the three division leaders, and the Phillies are just one run better than the Reds at +26. In all of Major League Baseball the Rockies are the only other team with a positive run differential and a losing record, but they have only outscored their opponents by 2 runs.

The Reds may not make the playoffs this year, but they are almost certain to finish at least .500 or better if they keep producing like they have so far.
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Baseball, luck, and run differential - fredtoast - 05-23-2019, 06:52 PM

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